Dreamland: A Novel

by Kevin Baker
Dreamland: A Novel
book data
228 ratings, 3.74 average rating, 49 reviews (more data...)
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published
October 1st 2002 (first published 1999) by Harper Perennial

binding
Paperback, 672 pages

setting
Unknown

isbn
0060934808   (isbn13: 9780060934804)

description
Kevin Baker's Dreamland is the kind of novel that begins with a two-page list of characters and ends with a nine-page glossary. In between, thi...more






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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 350)




El
El rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
09/07/07

bookshelves: late20th-centurylit
Read in September, 2007
Not normally a fan of historical fiction (if the history is interesting, why the need to fictionalize it?) I picked this book up merely for the novelty of the cover and the promise of Coney Island-goodness that screams from the top cover. And it was a buck in clearance at Half Price Books.

What I found was actually quite a surprise. I found myself not interested at all for well over 100 pages, but then all at once realized I was invested in some of the characters. The layout of the chapter...more
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Joey
10/03/08

Read in October, 2008
So it took better than a month for me to finish this rambling, historical tale about New York and Coney Island at the advent of the 20th century.

When Baker wrote about Dreamland and Luna Park and Steeplechase, those wondrous marvels of Coney Island, I was entertained. I was less entertained by the passages focused on the political mechinations of Tammany Hall and the corrupt maneuverings of the city councilmen and the police.

I hated every chapter about Freud. Freud? Freud and Jung, to...more
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Andrew
Andrew rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
06/15/07

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in May, 2007
recommends it for: Anyone who thinks history is more than dates and names.
In this soot-coated tale, an ensemble of immigrants and their children populate turn-of-the-century New York. They survive poverty, squalor, horrific crime and corruption. Each chases their own "American Dream," despite their awareness of it's falsehood. The characters lives intersect with many important events of the time including, but not limited to: the rise of Unions, labor law and Feminism, the slow decline of Tammany Hall, the eventual corruption of the Reform movement, New York...more
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Ewurama
Ewurama rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
01/20/07

Read in January, 2007
I enjoyed this book, although at 639 pages, it felt a bit too long. It's historical fiction, set in lower Manhattan and Coney Island circa 1910 complete with gangsters and sideshow freaks and actual historical figures. The narrator follows a number of different characters as they cross paths with each other, and the story has a fantastic quality to it, which I always appreciate.

My favorite passage:
"She crept on into the apartment, where everyone else was asleep, her pallet lying alr...more
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Nikki
09/21/08

Read in September, 2008
This is the first in Kevin Baker's 'City of Fire' trilogy and I'm literally just starting it, so I will come back and update this review as I get through the book. Based on subject matter and reviews alone, it promises to be complex and entertaining, all about the Jewish experience in turn-of-the-century Coney Island and the Lower East Side. more to come..
well, that got very complex, not only addressing the beginnings of the garment workers strikes in the lower east side, but chronicling a par...more
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Cynthia
Read in July, 2000
3/4 Stars
New York City and Coney Island in 1910 is the setting for this sprawling novel with a big imaginative cast of characters. Gyp the Blood is a gangster, Kid Twist works for him until he hits him with a shovel over Trick the Dwarf who takes him in and hids him in an elephant shaped tin hotel in Coney Island. Kid falls for Esther, a garment worker and Gyp's sister. Trick becomes King of the Little City with Mad Carlotta in Coney Island. There is also Big Tim Sullivan, Tammany Hall politic...more
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Melinda
bookshelves: fiction
This novel is much like the author's Paradise Alley, historical fiction set in and around New York City. I liked the way Baker provided different perspectives from the time -- from corrupt politicians to hardworking immigrants to Coney Island sideshow freaks. The sections that deal with the rift between Jung and Freud were very interesting, especially the latter's emerging views of vulgar America. As one wise man says to Freud, "Things don't move forward. The best you can hope is to sell pe...more
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Chris
02/03/08

Read in January, 2008
I like historical fiction like this, and I'm particularly drawn to and interested in stories about and in NYC at the turn of the century. This is told from several points of view: a gangster, a Tamaney politician, a shirtwaist factory girl and union organizer, Jung and Freud visiting America, and a dwarf at a Coney Island carnival show. The characters overlap and their stories connect. It is interesting how the historical figures are worked into this fictional story (Gyp the Blood, Tim Sulliv...more
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Mary Catherine
Mary Catherine rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
08/20/07

This is an historical novel about various people, real and fictional, in 1910 New York City. The story deals with the fantasy world of Coney Island, the brutality of sweatshops, the graft of Tammany Hall, and much more.

I found myself losing interest about two-thirds into it. I loved the first third but felt it really lost its momentum.

It is very well-written, however, and worth a look if you like historical fiction or if you like New York City, because the city really is the main charac...more
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Clarissa
recommends it for: Circus lovers, Coney Island lovers
Full of Classic Coney Island goodnes, this book is historical fiction about the early 1900's with such guest characters as Trick the Dwarf, Tom Sullivan, and Sigmund Frued. The book was just a hair too long, as I found my interest in the characters and their wellbeing start to wain around page 500. But I stuck it though, only to be disappointed as the narrator makes no definative statements about the outcome of the main characters but rather imagines what "might" have happened to them....more
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Mathias
this book sucked, but i read it all
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Stephanie
Stephanie rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
12/06/07

This book is long and not always easy to follow. There are a lot of characters and stories going on at once, and lots of terms I didn't know (though there is a glossary in the back). However, I gave it 4 stars because I loved some of the subplots, and I loved the history. The book has really stuck with me and I think about it whenever I am in New York. I recommend it for the history, the politics, and the connection to New York. Be patient if its hard to catch on at first - there are multiple st...more
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Stephanie
Read in July, 2007
Kevin Baker has written an in-depth, you-feel-like-you're-there story set in early 20th century New York. He ties in the heyday of Coney Island, Freud & Jung's visit to America, labor and ethnic issues, Tammany Hall, and the Triangle Shirtwaist Company fire. At turns violent and grotesque, this may not be everyone's choice for reading; for those who have a love affair with New York and/or excellently researched and written historical fiction, I would recommend this book. Part of Baker's ...more
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Kayley
08/07/07

bookshelves: miscellaneousisthebest
Read in August, 2007
This book is definitely a new favorite. It grips the reader from all angles, is rich and intelligent, alternately comical and gut-wrenching, and is both plot AND character driven.

My only complaint would be the (near) ending. While, intellectually, I can appreciate its utter uniqueness, it seemed a bit too solemn (if provocative) for a novel that was such a dreamscape up until that point. It seemed somehow unfulfilling.

All in all, a fabulous read.
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Roniq
Roniq marked it as to-read (review of isbn 0060852720)
02/05/08

bookshelves: to-read
oh my gosh, I flipped through this at half price books and had to flee the store before buying it( I could only sell books that day, no buying allowed) These are the kind of stories I love with massive characters full of crazy personalities and lifestyles that end up coming together. Just reading the back I felt like I was dropped into a David Lynch film or the movie "Freaks". And it takes place on Coney Island, how could you not read it I wonder?
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Faizah Roslaini
Read in January, 2006
Read this back when I was still 'bujang'. Remembered the story quite vividly but couldn't seem to enjoy it very much. The arrangement of chapters were a bit too confusing for me. Overall it was a challenging read. I wish I had some background of the history being told in this book, when I first got it.

Perhaps I would feel differently if I read it today though.
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Jay
02/25/08

recommended to Jay by: ira travis
recommends it for: everyone who is not a moron.
turn of the century new york city (it's "wild west period") as told from the perspective of two jewish gangsters, a female sweatshop worker in the triangle shirtwaist factory, a jewish prostitute and a midget who works in various coney island freak shows. my favorite non-harry potter novel that i have read in the past few years. fucking fantastic, and so much yiddish.
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Vanessa
I have to admit, I did not finish this book. I loved it at first - the New York history, the crazy story - but it began to jump around so much and I found myself interested in only a few characters that got buried beneath so many other characters. A much better and magical book that I would recommend over Dreamland is Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin.
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Melanie
Read in April, 2003
This portrait of immigrant New York set in the slums of the Lower East Side and Coney Island during the early twentieth century is a fine example of what historical fiction should be. If you fancy sideshow history and old time New York slums read this book. The author is the Chief Historical Researcher at the New York Times if anyone gives a damn.
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Amy
09/17/08

Read in January, 2007
I don't know why, but I liked this book a lot. I guess it's a perfect fit for someone who likes Coney Island. I found myself constantly looking up information about the history of Coney Island and New York. I had to confirm that indeed there was an elephant hotel, and other interesting tid-bits about its usually shady past.
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Dreamland (P.S.)
Dreamland (Hardcover)
Dreamland (Paperback)
Dreamland (Mass Market Paperback)
Dreamland (Paperback)